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No
player to date can match Yogi
Berra's resume when it comes to
playing on 14 pennant-winners and 10
World Championship teams. The heart
of the Yankees for 18 seasons, Yogi
Berra topped the 100-RBI mark four
years in a row and became a
three-time American League MVP. In
every season from 1948 to 1962,
Berra was selected to the All-Star
team....
Book Yogi Berra for Your Event
Yogi Berra is known to
millions who don't even
follow baseball. His
persona transcends the
game. Yogi Berra is
funny and, at a squat
5'8", was a seemingly
improbable star. But a
star he was - a Hall of
Famer. "To me," Casey
Stengel said, "he is a
great man. I am lucky to
have him and so are my
pitchers...He springs on
a bunt like it was
another dollar."
Through hard work and
the help of Bill Dickey,
Yogi Berra became a
great catcher. He led
the American League in
games caught and chances
accepted eight times,
and led the league in
double plays six times.
He is one of only four
catchers to ever field
1.000 in a season
(1958), and between July
28, 1957, and May 10,
1959, Berra set major
league records by
catching in 148
consecutive games and
accepting 950 chances
without making an error.
Yogi was a master at
calling pitches and
handling a pitching
staff. He caught two
no-hitters by Allie
Reynolds in 1951 and Don
Larsen's perfect game in
the 1956 World Series.
He treated every Yankee
pitcher differently;
some he goaded and some
he babied, depending on
their temperament. An
excellent, cat-like
athlete, he was also a
good defensive left
fielder late in his
career.
As a slugger, he was
feared throughout the
league. Berra American
League records for home
runs hit while playing
catcher with his 30 home
runs in both 1952 and
1956 and his 306
lifetime (these were
later broken by Carlton
Fisk). He also had five
100-RBI seasons. Between
1949 and 1955, when he
was the heart of the
Yankees' batting order,
he led the club in RBI
each season and won
three MVP awards.
Berra was one of the
greatest clutch hitters
of all time, "the
toughest man in the
league in the last three
innings," according to
Paul Richards, a rival
manager. Along with
Roberto Clemente, Yogi
Berra was probably the
best bad-ball hitter in
the game's history. He
was skilled at golfing
low pitches for deep
home runs and chopping
high pitches for line
drives. Yet for all his
aggressiveness at the
plate, he was hard to
strike out. In 1950, he
fanned only 12 times in
597 at-bats.
As Lawrence Peter Berra
had a way with the bat,
so does he have a way
with words. One of
Berra's first notable
quotes came in 1947,
when the people of his
hometown St. Louis threw
Berra a "night" before a
Yankees-Browns game.
Grateful, Berra told the
crowd: "I want to thank
everyone for making this
night necessary." He
once said of a
restaurant: "Nobody goes
there anymore, it's too
crowded." And as a
veteran, he noted, "I've
been with the Yankees 17
years, watching games
and learning. You can
see a lot by observing."
"A nickel ain't worth a
dime anymore," was his
pithy comment on
inflation. When asked as
a child how he liked
school he replied:
"Closed." His colorful
expressions that got to
the heart of things
became known as
"Yogi-isms."
After playing briefly in
the Yankee farm system,
Berra enlisted in the
navy in 1944. After his
discharge in 1946 he
reported to the Yankees'
Newark club in the
International League. He
had a great year (.314,
15 HRs, 59 RBI in only
277 at-bats) and was
called across the
Hudson.
Yogi Berra came up as an
outfielder before being
converted to catcher,
and he shared New York's
catching duties with
Aaron Robinson at first,
and later with Gus
Niarhos, before becoming
the Yankees' regular
catcher from 1949 to
1959. Except for a few
games with the Mets in
1965, Berra played his
entire career as a
Yankee, serving as an
outfielder and pinch
hitter as well as
catcher in 1960-63.
When his career was
over, Berra had played
on a record ten World
Series champions. He
also played in an
unmatched 14 World
Series and holds WS
records for games (75),
at-bats (259), hits
(71), and doubles (10).
Berra was named the
Yankees' manager for the
1964 season, the final
season of the mighty New
York dynasty. The
Yankees won the pennant
but were defeated by St.
Louis in a seven-game
World Series. The day
after the Series ended,
the Yankees fired Berra
and hired St. Louis
Manager Johnny Keane.
New York finished sixth
in 1965.
Berra, meanwhile,
rejoined Stengel with
the Mets. He took over
as the Mets' manager
when Gil Hodges died
suddenly in 1972 and led
them to the NL pennant
in 1973, thus joining
Joe McCarthy as the
second manager to win
pennants in both
leagues. In 1976 Berra
returned to the Yankees
as a coach, and he
managed the club again
in 1984 and the
beginning of 1985. He
later coached for
Houston. Wherever he
goes, Berra remains one
of baseball's most
popular figures. (MG)
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